COLUMBIA, S.C. - A South Carolina man filmed for the spoof documentary "Borat" using the bathroom filed a lawsuit claiming the movie's deleted scene was broadcast on cable television and the Internet.

The lawsuit is the latest in a growing number filed since the hit movie's release in November. Two South Carolina fraternity brothers also sued claiming they were tricked into making racist and sexist remarks to British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen in "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan."

This new lawsuit, filed Dec. 1, claims the man was using a urinal at an upscale Columbia restaurant where Cohen approached him and repeatedly invaded his privacy, according to the lawsuit. Cohen also entered an adjacent stall, lifting himself up to peer over at the man, who was not identified in the lawsuit. The man then leaves the bathroom as Borat is extending a tip tray.

"He is embarrassed and humiliated and leaves the restaurant," Columbia attorney Jonathan Milling said Tuesday.

The man was told a crew was filming a documentary on tourism in South Carolina, but he never saw cameras, which were hidden in the restroom, according to the lawsuit. The lawsuit makes no mention of a consent waiver and Milling said his client was not paid.

"I don't think it would matter," Milling said. "I don't think S.C. law would permit a waiver ... to govern this type of conduct."

Louis Petrich, an attorney for defendants 20th Century Fox and One America Productions, didn't immediately return a telephone message Tuesday. Other defendants include Web sites YouTube and Google and Comedy Central.

"He has been contacted by numerous people who have recognized him," Milling said of his client.

The man wants compensation for humiliation he's already suffered and has asked the deleted scene be removed from Web sites and not included in any DVD release, according to the lawsuit.

A judge in Los Angeles last week rejected a request by the two South Carolina fraternity brothers to block the DVD release of the movie.

The judge also refused to order the removal of a scene that includes the two men, who claim they had been duped into misbehaving on camera.

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